Saturday, September 4, 2010

Internet crime in Tokyo hits record high in first half of 2010


AP A computer user is silhouetted in an Internet cafe. File photo
Police responded to a record 2,444 Internet crime cases nationwide in the first half of this year, a National Police Agency survey showed today.
The number, up 586 or 31.5 per cent from a year earlier, represented a new high since the NPA started gathering statistics for Internet crimes, defined as crimes which use a computer network, on a half-year basis in 2004.
Of the total, the number of fraud cases, such as swindling money from a successful bidder by posting false
information in an online auction, climbed 22.8 per cent to 867 cases.
The number of child pornography cases targeting children under 18 jumped 69.6 per cent to 329, a record high for any January-June period, while child prostitution cases increased 21.8 per cent to 212.
The number of child porn cases using the Internet accounted for more than half the total cases involving production and distribution of child pornography during the reporting period, according to the NPA.
The agency attributed the increase in the number of fraud cases partly to increased efforts by police.
The number of copyright infringement cases, including illegal distribution of films using file-sharing software,
came to 56, compared with none in the first half of 2009 and 75 in the second half of last year.
On the other hand, the number of unauthorized computer access cases, such as bidding in an online auction by using a false identity, plunged to 85 from 1,965 in the corresponding period of 2009.
The NPA, however, says the figures do not necessarily represent an improvement, because the previous year’s figure included a number of cases involving similar groups which repeatedly committed such crimes.

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